Daylight savings time is coming up in just a little over two weeks. When you change your Clocks, it’s a good time to also change your smoke alarm battery.
Firefighters work tirelessly to help reduce the risk factors by educating their residents on the importance of having a working smoke alarm. In many communities, fire departments are able to distribute free batteries to citizens. Energizer has donated more than four million batteries to local fire departments. This year, people have an opportunity to get involved in a very simple way to help increase the donation.
When people visit the CYCCYB tab on the Energizer Bunny Facebook page, (www.facebook.com/energizerbunny), you can send a Change Your Clock Change Your Battery reminder to friends to trigger a battery donation. In addition, people can make an online pledge to change the batteries in their smoke alarms and carbon monoxide detectors or develop a home escape plan online, and help increase the number of batteries the company donates this year, up to 400,000 batteries.
Did you know……
- 96 percent of American homes have at least one smoke alarm, but 19 percent of all homes with smoke alarms do not have at least one smoke alarm that works, mostly due to missing or dead batteries. This means roughly 20.5 million homes are at risk because of non-working smoke alarms and an additional 4.5 million homes are at risk by not having smoke alarms. This prevents the U.S. from achieving the full potential of increased fire safety from smoke alarms
- Three-quarters of child fire fatalities under age 15 occurred in homes without working smoke alarms.
- On average, home fires kill 500 children ages 14 and under each year.
- Roughly half of the people who died in home fires started by children playing with fire were under five years old.
Don’t forget about your carbon monoxide alarms too.
Carbon monoxide is sometimes called the “the silent killer.” It is colorless, odorless and tasteless. The National Safety Council reports that almost 700 people die each year as a result of unintentional poisoning by gases or vapors in non-fire situations. Carbon monoxide was involved in the majority of these deaths.
We have both a fire alarm and a carbon monoxide alarm, you can never be to cautious when you are using oil heat and have kids in the house. I am a little nervous that we only have a smoke alarm upstairs and not downstairs. We always check the batteries though, and don’t keep matches or any of that in the house. My kids are sneaky.
Energizer is giving one of my readers a First Alert smoke alarm, along with a 2-pack of 9volt Energizer Max batteries.
To enter Leave me a comment with how often you check your smoke alarm batteries.
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Contest ends 11/20/10
Disclosure: I did not receive any compensation for this post, a product will be received from Energizer who is also providing the giveaway.
Truthfully,I dont check them very often,not as much as I should! Perhaps once a year!
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We check our smoke alarms about once a year, sometimes twice.
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I hate to admit this but I only check mine when the indicator beep tells me the battery is low=(
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